Parenting Dilemma: Am I the Jerk for Sending My Son Away After His Mom’s Death?

Parenting Dilemma: Am I the Jerk for Sending My Son Away After His Mom’s Death?

Based on a real post from an anxious dad on Reddit, this story had me sipping tea and clutching pearls simultaneously. Buckle up, folks — this rollercoaster is about to take off.

The Backdrop: A Tragedy That Shattered a Family

Narrator kicks off with a gut-puncher: his wife of many years tragically passed away from cancer last year. Boy, if you’ve ever felt like life pulled the rug out from under you, multiply that by a thousand. But as heartbreaking as that is, the aftermath for his family yanked at my heartstrings.

Their household is throwing down the gauntlet in what I’d call ’Handling Grief: Expert Level’. The older two kids are trudging through that grief swamp, barely keeping their heads above the muddy emotional waters. But it’s youngest son, Carter, who’s found himself drowning in it.

Carter’s Downward Spiral

At just 15, Carter’s having an especially rough time. He and his mom were tight as Spandex, and her passing was like a sucker-punch to the soul. Consequently, Carter has quit football and wrestling, is faking illnesses to skip school, companying himself with alcohol and his late mother’s pain meds—frankly, behaving like he’s auditioning for an episode of Intervention.

As if that’s not harrowing enough, he’s also turned home into Grand Central Station for unsanctioned late-night visitors. The straw that broke dad’s back? Catching one of his senior football players leaping out of Carter’s bedroom window. I feel like I need some popcorn, this is that dramatic.

The Ultimate Move: Sending Carter to His Grandparents

After witnessing yet another episode of Carter-loses-his-sanity, our dear father arranges for Carter to stay with his grandparents. Noble, one might argue, seeing as the grandparents are retired and likely to give Carter the full-court-press TLC he’s clearly lacking. So Dad breaks the news to Carter, who reacts with Oscar-worthy theatrics, filling the air with accusations of abandonment and, the pièce de résistance, a wish that dear old dad had died instead of mom. Talk about a canonball-to-the-guts!

Is Dad the Villain?

The million-dollar Reddit question: is he the jerk for sending his youngest away? Ah, dilemmas, dilemmas! As an expert in all things sassy, let’s break this down together, shall we?

Consider the State of Mental Health

It’s clear as daylight Carter is spiraling like water down a toilet bowl. Dad’s not Dr. Phil, though; he has his own grief to wrestle. Sometimes, when you can’t keep the spinning plates from crashing down, you gotta call in the pros – and by pros, I mean loving grandparents who have weathered more storms than they can probably count. Sure beats sending the kid to a military academy, right?

The Grief Factor

Being 15 and grappling with the loss of a parent? I don’t envy Carter one bit. That’s the kind of existential crisis that makes emo kids look like ballers at a rave. Do grandparents come off a bit… well, old school? Sure, typically. But consistency and care from a place Carter isn’t busy turning into a rave headquarter might just be the Prozac for his soul.

The Dad’s Dilemma

Let’s cut dad some slack. He’s trying to walk the tightrope over this circus ring known as single-parenting plus grief. Sending Carter away isn’t so much an act of cruelty as it is an act of desperate love. Of course, does he want a medal for that? Maybe not, but could we at least throw him a participation trophy?

The Drama Unfolds

For his part, Dad’s taking blame blows harder than a carnival boxer machine. Carter lashing out is as mature as one might expect from a walking hormone who just lost his BFF. But at times, the heart must sting now to heal later. Sending Carter to his grandparents might feel like a shotgun wedding kinda rapid decision, but hear me out: it’s a plan birthed in love.

Roger Weighs In: The Definitive Verdict

Sass aside, here’s what your pal Roger thinks: Dad’s decision came from the heart, even if it was wrapped in a bit of desperation. Carter’s acting out not because Dad’s a flop, but rather because life delivered the young lad a cosmic wedgie. Being cared for by his grandparents? Might just turn that downward spiral into some slow and steady healing.

Hey, sometimes the best solutions come from those we least expect. Grandpa might be dropping some World War II wisdom bombs and Grandma’s serving casseroles of comfort. And let’s be real: as much as we love a good intensely dramatic coming-of-age story, IRL, stability trumps shock-value.

So, dear Reddit Dad, you did what you thought was best for Carter, and that intention? That’s what truly matters. Will there be bumps? Sure. But holding it together for just long enough to give your youngest some room to breathe isn’t jerk territory—it’s a heart-led regulation amidst a storm of emotions.

Until next time, my worried parents and curious spectators… stay sassy, stay sane, and remember: sometimes, all you need is a touch of grandparent-given love and a hefty dose of patience.

Original story

My wife died last year from cancer and I can’t say I’m handling it well ..

My oldest two are doing ok ish even though they’re having their own problems but my youngest Carter (15M) is taking it particularly bad. He and his mom were really close him being the baby and all.

Over the last few months he quit football and wrestling,. He’s been making himself sick on purpose.

..

Drinking and taking his mom’s old pain meds. He’s Skipping class and now he’s sneaking boys in and out the house at all times of the night I work and I can’t keep an eye on him all the time.

Last week I caught one of my senior players jumping out his window and I just got fed up. I arranged it with my parents and I told him he was gonna stay with his Grandparents who are both retired over this school year .

.He was pissed and accused me of abandonung him.

I told him it was for his own good. He just started crying and saying he wished I was the one that died .

..

AITA?